Honor a special woman with a Mother's Day/International Women's Day Fellowship

Make a mother’s love a force for change. Give to The Eliminate Project: Kiwanis eliminating maternal and neonatal tetanus, and become a Mother’s Day Zeller Fellow. You can make your gift in the name of your mother—or any woman who has been an inspiration.

Through the Zeller Fellowship Program, a gift of US$1,250 to The Eliminate Project saves or protects more than 690 lives from maternal and neonatal tetanus. With the Mother’s Day Zeller Fellowship, you can protect those mothers and children while celebrating a woman in your own life.

If you give US$1,250 in full between March 1 and June 15, you’ll receive:

Zeller Fellowship medallion

Limited-edition Mother’s Day lapel pin

Personalized certificate

If you make your gift in someone's name, she will receive the recognition items above—and a postcard informing her of the gift made in her honor.

What better way to share the influence of someone special? And what better time? Honor an extraordinary woman in your life—and help protecting the connection between millions of mothers and babies in the 23 countries where MNT remains a threat.

A MOTHER'S STORY

Maricel Busalin, mother of an infant who died from tetanus infection, receives her third dose of the tetanus toxoid vaccination in the door-to-door campaign.

“She stopped feeding. Then my baby was turning blue,” recalls Maricel Busalin, now 28, the Iraga mother whose baby was the last known case of neonatal tetanus in Solana, Philippines.

Although Solana does not have the highest incidence of tetanus in the country, the 18 cases since 2000 are considered alarming. Prior immunization coverage in Solana was uneven and left pockets of their population unprotected.

Ms. Busalin’s baby girl was born suddenly one morning at home with a birthing attendant, called a hilot. The hilot used sterilized scissors to snip the umbilical cord but smeared coconut oil on the cut causing the infection to set in. In Solana, 90% of births are delivered at home. Ms. Busalin says everyone she knew relied on a hilot when it was time to give birth.

In addition to lack of immunization, maternal and neonatal tetanus results from the use of unclean instruments during a delivery or the practice of applying ash, garlic or even a wasps’ nest on a baby’s cut umbilical cord, a healing ritual often favored by the traditional birth attendants who assist women in home births.

“She was jerking. She was squeezing up, going stiff,” Ms. Busalin demonstrates. “As much as possible I wanted it to be me instead of my child suffering.” The mother of four had never been vaccinated because she feared the needles too much, she says.